Abstract
PURPOSE: To study the impact of inversion of soft-copy chest radiographs on the detection of small solitary pulmonary nodules using a high-resolution monitor.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The study group consisted of 80 patients who had undergone posterior chest radiography; 40 had a solitary noncalcified pulmonary nodule approximately 1 cm in diameter, and 40 were control subjects. Standard and inverse digital images using the inversion tool on a PACS system were displayed on high-resolution monitors (2048x2560x8 bit). Ten radiologists were requested to rank each image using a five-point scale (1=definitely negative, 3=equivocal or indeterminate, 5=definite nodule), and the data were interpreted using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis.
RESULTS: The area under the ROC curve for pooled data of standard image sets was significantly larger than that of inverse image sets (0.8893 and 0.8095, respectively; p<0.05). Interpretation of both standard and inversion images did not lead to more accurate detection of small pulmonary nodules (area under the ROC curve: 0.8835 and 0.8893, respectively; p>0.05).
CONCLUSION: For detecting small solitary pulmonary nodules, inverse digital images were significantly inferior to standard digital images.